Additional information may be obtained by contacting the Good Neighbor Project, 42 Davis Rd. #3B, Acton, MA 01720. (508) 264–4060.
2.
The discussion in this section of the paper is principally drawn from a paper by the author and co-author Fred Millar. Millar is the chemical safety director for the Friends of the Earth.
3.
Source: National Environmental Law Center and CALPIRG, Informational Release on Anniversary of Dunsmuir Spill, July 1992. Data reflects incidents from July 15, 1991 to July 9, 1992.
Reprinted with permission from the Community Plume, Friends of the Earth.
7.
The Good Neighbor Project would be happy to provide additional information on any of these arrangements, upon request.
8.
57 Fed. Reg. No. 36 p. 6411.
9.
43The Business Lawyer887, May, 1988. The test used most commonly by courts in determining whether to afford trade secret protection (from the Restatement of Torts Sec. 757, comment b (1939)) considers the extent to which a company took measures to protect its trade secrets. The test evaluates the following six factors: • The extent to which information is known outside of the business. • The extent to which it known by employees and others involved in the business. • The extent of measures taken to guard the secrecy of the information. • The value of the information to P and his competitors. • The amount of effort or money expended in developing the information. • The ease or difficulty with which the information could be properly acquired or duplicated.
10.
T.T. Healy & Son. Inc. v. James A. Murphy & Son Inc., 260 NE 2d 723, 731 (Mass. 1970).